We have a 32 foot Jayco travel trailer that we pull
all over the place (mostly central and west Tennessee,
some Kentucky, Missouri, Arkansas).

Prices where we have stayed range from $5 with nothing 
but a place to park to $41.50 with pad, water, sewage, electric.

There are much more expensive ones, but we don't stay there....

-- 
Larry Smith
[email protected]

On Thu May 31 2018 10:40, [email protected] wrote:
> What does a traveler expect to pay to park in one of these places?  I have
> about 10 acres next to I-80 with water, power and sewer already installed. 
> I could lay down some gravel and put up a sign.
>
> From: Steve Jones
> Sent: Thursday, May 31, 2018 9:39 AM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: [AFMUG] RV park network design
>
> industrial vending machine selling routers.
> Im trying to get the one we are doing to finger conduit to each site post
> for future use, whether fiber or copper
>
> On Thu, May 31, 2018 at 10:22 AM, Cameron Crum <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>   You'd be surprised. A lot of them travel with their own cable modems and
> wifi routers. But you could always rent them one, or set up each ONT with a
> small wifi router already and give them a choice.
>
>   On Thu, May 31, 2018 at 10:05 AM, Jason McKemie
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>     Probably zero.
>
>
>     On Thursday, May 31, 2018, <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>       How many RV travelers are set up for ethernet vs WiFi?
>
>       From: Jason McKemie
>       Sent: Thursday, May 31, 2018 6:42 AM
>       To: [email protected]
>       Subject: Re: [AFMUG] RV park network design
>
>       I'd do fiber as well, seems like that many long-run cat5/6
> connections could be problematic.
>
>       On Wednesday, May 30, 2018, Cameron Crum <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>         Why run ethernet? This seems ideal for fiber. Put a small box for
> the ONT on the same pole as the electrical hookup with about 20 ft of
> ethernet cable so they can drag it through a window and call it a day. Rent
> them a cheap router if they want wifi or mount a small loco ac or something
> running as a low powered AP and alternate frequencies every 3 or 4 spaces.
>
>
>
>
>         On Wed, May 30, 2018 at 2:57 PM, Colin Stanners
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>           Be careful of selling service over Wi-FI... customers buy "signal
> boosters" that run their own DHCP server, or they see a very strong signal
> to their booster and complain that their service sucks (don't understand
> that the signal from the booster to your network is low). And there's
> interference from mobile hotspots etc....
>
>
>           I would do like Adam says, run ethernet lines everywhere with
> outdoor-grade ethernet connection boxes (make sure to have a surge
> protector on each line as it returns to your switch). You can try offering
> some service over wifi but tell customers that if they want reliable speeds
> they need to hardwire.
>
>
>           On Wed, May 30, 2018 at 1:07 PM, castarritt
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>             We were approached by a current subscriber who is building an
> RV park with around ~100 pads, and he wants us to offer service to his
> tenants.  This isn't the typical situation where we would sell service to
> the RV park, and they handle distributing it to their customers.  He wants
> to avoid providing wi-fi himself, and will instead let us charge every
> client that wants service separately.  Also, this isn't a campground; his
> shortest lease term will be monthly.
>
>             While the park is under construction, he is willing to let us
> lay conduit, so we could provide wired service to each pad if we wanted to.
>  Alternatively, we could just setup a bunch of wi-fi APs.  One potential
> complication is that we have a fairly busy cluster of 5g PMP450s a couple
> hundred yards from this RV park, so while wired service could be more
> reliable for the park tenants, the potential for 100 customer wi-fi routers
> we can't control operating within sight of our PMP450 POP sounds like the
> stuff of nightmares.
>
>             We are leaning more towards a wi-fi option due to better
> control over spectrum, as well as avoiding maintenance of 100 outdoor
> ethernet ports that the customers would be plugging into, but we are open
> to suggestions.
>
>             Also, assuming wi-fi is the correct answer, does anyone have
> any equipment recommendations?  The park is about 400' by 900'.  I was
> looking at either doing a whole bunch of low end APs, or maybe ~8 sectors. 
> We haven't used any of the Cambium wi-fi gear yet, but the cnPilot E501S
> looks interesting.
>
>
>
>             Thank you,
>
>             Chris Starritt
>             Western Broadband
>             [email protected]
>             512-257-1077

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